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Lehtisaari shopping centre

Demolished buildings and structures in HelsinkiMunkkiniemiShopping centres in Helsinki
Lehtisaarentie 1 Helsinki 2004 G3785 hkm.HKMS000005 km0000onwf
Lehtisaarentie 1 Helsinki 2004 G3785 hkm.HKMS000005 km0000onwf

The Lehtisaari shopping centre was a two-floor shopping centre located in Lehtisaari, Helsinki, Finland built in 1967. It was designed by the architect Olli Kivinen who was responsible for the zoning of the area. The shopping centre activities stopped in 2023 and the building was demolished in 2025.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Lehtisaari shopping centre (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Lehtisaari shopping centre
Olli Kivisen polku, Helsinki Munkkiniemi (Western major district)

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Wikipedia: Lehtisaari shopping centreContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 60.18065 ° E 24.849958333333 °
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Olli Kivisen polku
00340 Helsinki, Munkkiniemi (Western major district)
Uusimaa, Finland
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Lehtisaarentie 1 Helsinki 2004 G3785 hkm.HKMS000005 km0000onwf
Lehtisaarentie 1 Helsinki 2004 G3785 hkm.HKMS000005 km0000onwf
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Teknologföreningen
Teknologföreningen

Teknologföreningen is the only student nation at the Aalto University. The only other university in Finland hosting student nations is the University of Helsinki. The Aalto University was formed in 2010 by a merger of three universities, before the merger Teknologföreningen was a student corporation of the Helsinki University of Technology. Therefore the majority of the members are students of engineering or architecture. Teknologföreningen was founded in 1872. It was the predecessor of the student union of the Helsinki University of Technology. It is also older than any other student organization at the Aalto University. Teknologföreningen's primary purpose is to unite students interested in speaking the Swedish language and to guarantee equal rights to Swedish-speaking students at the bilingual Aalto University.Teknologföreningen has its own peculiar building from 1966, named Urdsgjallar — a building that resembles the shape of a drinking horn seen from an aerial perspective, that according to legend has no two perpendicular walls. It was designed by Kurt Moberg, and it is a well-known example of Brutalist architecture in Finland. The name of the building derives from Gjallarhorn of norse mythology. The building hosts a lunch restaurant for students as well as rooms intended for work and recreational purposes. The building also hosts a semicircular sauna called "Pi" with a radius of 3.14 meters. — In 2020 it was decided to tear down the building because it is in poor condition.